Why the downvotes? Do people feel that "the FAI should at some point fold up and vanish out of existence" is so obvious that it's not worth pointing out? Or disagree that the FAI should in fact do that? Or feel that it's wrong to point this out in the context of Manfred's comment? (I didn't mean to suggest that Manfred disagrees with this, but felt that his comment was giving the wrong impression.)
Will sentient, self-interested agents ever be free from the existential risks of UFAI/intelligence amplification without some form of oversight? It's nice to think that humanity will grow up and learn how to get along, but even if that's true for 99.9999999% of humans that leaves 7 people from today's population who would probably have the power to trigger their own UFAI hard takeoff after a FAI fixes the world and then disappears. Even if such a disaster could be stopped it is a risk probably worth the cost of keeping some form of FAI around indefinitel...
One open question in AI risk strategy is: Can we trust the world's elite decision-makers (hereafter "elites") to navigate the creation of human-level AI (and beyond) just fine, without the kinds of special efforts that e.g. Bostrom and Yudkowsky think are needed?
Some reasons for concern include:
But if you were trying to argue for hope, you might argue along these lines (presented for the sake of argument; I don't actually endorse this argument):
The basic structure of this 'argument for hope' is due to Carl Shulman, though he doesn't necessarily endorse the details. (Also, it's just a rough argument, and as stated is not deductively valid.)
Personally, I am not very comforted by this argument because:
Obviously, there's a lot more for me to spell out here, and some of it may be unclear. The reason I'm posting these thoughts in such a rough state is so that MIRI can get some help on our research into this question.
In particular, I'd like to know: